| Literature DB >> 23776568 |
Daniela Hartl1, Stephan Klatt, Manfred Roch, Zoltan Konthur, Joachim Klose, Thomas E Willnow, Michael Rohe.
Abstract
A growing body of evidence suggests a role for soluble alpha-amyloid precursor protein (sAPPalpha) in pathomechanisms of Alzheimer disease (AD). This cleavage product of APP was identified to have neurotrophic properties. However, it remained enigmatic what proteins, targeted by sAPPalpha, might be involved in such neuroprotective actions. Here, we used high-resolution two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to analyze proteome changes downstream of sAPPalpha in neurons. We present evidence that sAPPalpha regulates expression and activity of CDK5, a kinase that plays an important role in AD pathology. We also identified the cytoprotective chaperone ORP150 to be induced by sAPPalpha as part of this protective response. Finally, we present functional evidence that the sAPPalpha receptor SORLA is essential to mediate such molecular functions of sAPPalpha in neurons.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23776568 PMCID: PMC3679172 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Protein expression changes in neurons treated with sAPPalpha.
(A) Prototypic two-dimensional polyacrylamid gel of proteins extracted from primary cortical neurons stained with silver nitrate. Significant protein spot alterations in response to sAPPalpha treatment (300 ng/ml) for one hour (red circles), 48 hours (blue circles) or in both treatment conditions (green circles) are indicated (n = 6 biological replicates per genotype; paired Student’s t-test p<0.05). Gene names of identified proteins altered in both treatment conditions are indicated at respective positions. (B) Magnification of gel region containing cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (CDK5). CDK5 is indicated in the non-treated (control) and treated (sAPPalpha) condition. (C) Western blots of CDK5 in primary cortical neurons treated with sAPPalpha for one hour or 48 hours, respectively. Treated neurons (sAPPalpha) show reduced expression levels of CDK5 as compared to control neurons (control). Actin served as loading control.
CDK5 associated proteins significantly altered in expression after treatment of neurons with sAPPalpha (1 h, 48 h indicate duration of treatment; ↑ up-regulation, ↓ down-regulation, ratio treated/control).
| Treatment condition | Direction of regulation | Gene name | Protein name | Comments |
| 1 h, 48 h | ↑ (1.34); ↑ (1.37; 1.64); ↑ (1.52) | Crmp1; Dpysl2; Dpysl4 | Dihydropyrimidinase-related protein/Collapsin-response mediator protein | Collapsin-response mediator proteins (CRMPs) are involved in apoptosis/proliferation, cell migration, and differentiation. CRMP2 binds to microtubules and regulates axon outgrowth in neurons. This action is regulated by phosphorylation (via CDK5- and other kinases) at sites hyperphosphorylated in Alzheimer disease |
| 1 h, 48 h | ↓ (0.52; 0.6; 0.61); ↑,↓ (0.83; 1.38) | Hist1h2ba; Hist1h4a | Histone H2B type 1-A; Histone H4 | CDK5 phosphorylates a component of the histone deacetylase complex and thus regulates histone acetylation i.e. during neuronal cell death. CDK5 can also directly phosphorylates histones |
| 48 h | ↓ (0.8) | Stxbp1 | Syntaxin-binding protein 1 (Munc18-1) | CDK5 promotes Munc18-1 phosphorylation and calcium-dependent exocytosis |
| 48 h | ↑ (1.23; 1.35) | Cbx3 | Chromobox protein homolog 3 | Also known as HP1gamma; repressor of E2F-dependent transcription which is regulated by CDK5 in the nucleus |
| 1 h, 48 h | ↓ (0.71); ↓ (0.79; 0.81; 0.59) | Tubb2a; Tubb2b | Tubulin beta-2A chain;Tubulin beta-2B chain | CDK5 phosphorylates several tubulin associated proteins regulating tubulin dynamics |
| 1 h | ↑ (1.32); ↓ (0.69); ↑ (1.31) | Ina; Myh10; Npm1 | Alpha-Internexin; Myosin-10; Nucleophosmin | CDK5 phosphorylation targets [55,56]. The intermediate-filament protein alpha-internexin was altered in neurons after CDK5 inhibition |
Figure 2Reduced uptake of sAPPalpha in SORLA-deficient neurons.
Quantification of human, recombinant sAPPalpha in primary cortical neurons either non-treated (control) or treated with 300 ng/ml sAPPalpha for 1 h using Western blotting (A) and densitometric scanning of replicate blots (B). Sorl1 neurons show reduced levels sAPPalpha after one hour of treatment compared with wild-type cells (wt; n = 8, Mann-Whitney U test). Actin served as loading control.
Figure 3Reduction of CDK5 activity in neurons treated with sAPPalpha is SORLA-dependent.
Quantification of CDK5, CDK5-target phospho-CRMP2, total CRMP2, and CDK5-adaptor proteins p35 and p25 in primary cortical neurons either non-treated (control) or treated with 300 ng/ml sAPPalpha for 1 h using Western blotting (A) and densitometric scanning of replicate blots (B). In wild- type neurons (wt), CDK5, p25 and phospho-CRMP2 (p-CRMP2) were significantly down-regulated after sAPPalpha treatment. Sorl1 neurons show no altered levels of the same proteins after one hour of sAPPalpha treatment (n = 6, Mann-Whitney U test). Actin served as loading control.
Figure 4Induction of ORP150 in sAPPalpha treated neurons.
Quantification of ORP150 in primary cortical neurons either non-treated (control) or treated with 300 ng/ml sAPPalpha for 1 h using Western blotting (A) and densitometric scanning of replicate blots (B). In wild-type neurons (wt), ORP150 is significantly up-regulated after sAPPalpha treatment. No alteration in ORP150 expression was observed in Sorl1 neurons after one hour of treatment (n = 6, Mann-Whitney U test). Actin served as loading control.